The Elite College Students Who Can’t Read Books - "It’s not that they don’t want to do the reading. It’s that they don’t know how. Middle and high schools have stopped asking them to."

To read a book in college, it helps to have read a book in high school.​

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Illustration by Masha Krasnova-Shabaeva

By Rose Horowitch
October 1, 2024
Updated at 10:57 a.m. ET on October 1, 2024

Nicholas Dames has taught Literature Humanities, Columbia University’s required great-books course, since 1998. He loves the job, but it has changed. Over the past decade, students have become overwhelmed by the reading. College kids have never read everything they’re assigned, of course, but this feels different. Dames’s students now seem bewildered by the thought of finishing multiple books a semester. His colleagues have noticed the same problem. Many students no longer arrive at college—even at highly selective, elite colleges—prepared to read books.

This development puzzled Dames until one day during the fall 2022 semester, when a first-year student came to his office hours to share how challenging she had found the early assignments. Lit Hum often requires students to read a book, sometimes a very long and dense one, in just a week or two. But the student told Dames that, at her public high school, she had never been required to read an entire book. She had been assigned excerpts, poetry, and news articles, but not a single book cover to cover.

Read: Why kids aren’t falling in love with reading

“My jaw dropped,” Dames told me. The anecdote helped explain the change he was seeing in his students: It’s not that they don’t want to do the reading. It’s that they don’t know how. Middle and high schools have stopped asking them to.

In 1979, Martha Maxwell, an influential literacy scholar, wrote, “Every generation, at some point, discovers that students cannot read as well as they would like or as well as professors expect.” Dames, who studies the history of the novel, acknowledged the longevity of the complaint. “Part of me is always tempted to be very skeptical about the idea that this is something new,” he said.

Daniel Shore, the chair of Georgetown’s English department, told me that his students have trouble staying focused on even a sonnet.

And yet, “I think there is a phenomenon that we’re noticing that I’m also hesitant to ignore.” Twenty years ago, Dames’s classes had no problem engaging in sophisticated discussions of Pride and Prejudice one week and Crime and Punishment the next. Now his students tell him up front that the reading load feels impossible. It’s not just the frenetic pace; they struggle to attend to small details while keeping track of the overall plot.

No comprehensive data exist on this trend, but the majority of the 33 professors I spoke with relayed similar experiences. Many had discussed the change at faculty meetings and in conversations with fellow instructors. Anthony Grafton, a Princeton historian, said his students arrive on campus with a narrower vocabulary and less understanding of language than they used to have. There are always students who “read insightfully and easily and write beautifully,” he said, “but they are now more exceptions.” Jack Chen, a Chinese-literature professor at the University of Virginia, finds his students “shutting down” when confronted with ideas they don’t understand; they’re less able to persist through a challenging text than they used to be. Daniel Shore, the chair of Georgetown’s English department, told me that his students have trouble staying focused on even a sonnet.

Failing to complete a 14-line poem without succumbing to distraction suggests one familiar explanation for the decline in reading aptitude: smartphones. Teenagers are constantly tempted by their devices, which inhibits their preparation for the rigors of college coursework—then they get to college, and the distractions keep flowing. “It’s changed expectations about what’s worthy of attention,” Daniel Willingham, a psychologist at UVA, told me. “Being bored has become unnatural.” Reading books, even for pleasure, can’t compete with TikTok, Instagram, YouTube. In 1976, about 40 percent of high-school seniors said they had read at least six books for fun in the previous year, compared with 11.5 percent who hadn’t read any. By 2022, those percentages had flipped.

Read: The terrible costs of a phone-based childhood

But middle- and high-school kids appear to be encountering fewer and fewer books in the classroom as well. For more than two decades, new educational initiatives such as No Child Left Behind and Common Core emphasized informational texts and standardized tests. Teachers at many schools shifted from books to short informational passages, followed by questions about the author’s main idea—mimicking the format of standardized reading-comprehension tests. Antero Garcia, a Stanford education professor, is completing his term as vice president of the National Council of Teachers of English and previously taught at a public school in Los Angeles. He told me that the new guidelines were intended to help students make clear arguments and synthesize texts. But “in doing so, we’ve sacrificed young people’s ability to grapple with long-form texts in general.”

Mike Szkolka, a teacher and an administrator who has spent almost two decades in Boston and New York schools, told me that excerpts have replaced books across grade levels. “There’s no testing skill that can be related to … Can you sit down and read Tolstoy? ” he said. And if a skill is not easily measured, instructors and district leaders have little incentive to teach it. Carol Jago, a literacy expert who crisscrosses the country helping teachers design curricula, says that educators tell her they’ve stopped teaching the novels they’ve long revered, such as My Ántonia and Great Expectations. The pandemic, which scrambled syllabi and moved coursework online, accelerated the shift away from teaching complete works.

In a recent EdWeek Research Center survey of about 300 third-to-eighth-grade educators, only 17 percent said they primarily teach whole texts. An additional 49 percent combine whole texts with anthologies and excerpts. But nearly a quarter of respondents said that books are no longer the center of their curricula. One public-high-school teacher in Illinois told me that she used to structure her classes around books but now focuses on skills, such as how to make good decisions. In a unit about leadership, students read parts of Homer’s Odyssey and supplement it with music, articles, and TED Talks. (She assured me that her students read at least two full texts each semester.) An Advanced Placement English Literature teacher in Atlanta told me that the class used to read 14 books each year. Now they’re down to six or seven.

“It’s not like I can say, ‘Okay, over the next three weeks, I expect you to read The Iliad,’ because they’re not going to do it.”

Private schools, which produce a disproportionate share of elite college students, seem to have been slower to shift away from reading complete volumes—leading to what Dames describes as a disconcerting reading-skills gap among incoming freshmen. But private schools are not immune to the trend. At the prep school that I graduated from five years ago, I took a Jane Austen course my senior year. I read only a single Austen novel.

The issue that Dames and other professors have observed is distinct from the problem at community colleges and nonselective universities, where some students arrive with literacy and comprehension deficits that can leave them unable to complete collegiate courses. High-achieving students at exclusive schools like Columbia can decode words and sentences. But they struggle to muster the attention or ambition required to immerse themselves in a substantial text.

Faced with this predicament, many college professors feel they have no choice but to assign less reading and lower their expectations. Victoria Kahn, who has taught literature at UC Berkeley since 1997, used to assign 200 pages each week. Now she assigns less than half of that. “I don’t do the whole Iliad. I assign books of The Iliad. I hope that some of them will read the whole thing,” Kahn told me. “It’s not like I can say, ‘Okay, over the next three weeks, I expect you to read The Iliad,’ because they’re not going to do it.”

Xochitl Gonzalez: The schools that are no longer teaching kids to read books

Andrew Delbanco, a longtime American-studies professor at Columbia, now teaches a seminar on short works of American prose instead of a survey course on literature. The Melville segment used to include Moby-Dick; now his students make do with Billy Budd, Benito Cereno, and “Bartleby, the Scrivener.” There are some benefits—short works allow more time to focus on “the intricacies and subtleties of language,” Delbanco told me—and he has made peace with the change. “One has to adjust to the times,” he said.

The Columbia instructors who determine the Lit Hum curriculum decided to trim the reading list for the current school year. (It had been growing in recent years, even while students struggled with the reading, as new books by nonwhite authors were added.) Like Delbanco, some see advantages to teaching fewer books. Even the best-prepared students have probably been skimming some of their Lit Hum assignments for years. Joseph Howley, the program’s chair, said he’d rather students miss out on some of the classics—Crime and Punishment is now off the list—but read the remaining texts in greater depth. And, crucially, the change will give professors more time to teach students how they expect them to read.

But it’s not clear that instructors can foster a love of reading by thinning out the syllabus. Some experts I spoke with attributed the decline of book reading to a shift in values rather than in skill sets. Students can still read books, they argue—they’re just choosing not to. Students today are far more concerned about their job prospects than they were in the past. Every year, they tell Howley that, despite enjoying what they learned in Lit Hum, they plan to instead get a degree in something more useful for their career.

The same factors that have contributed to declining enrollment in the humanities might lead students to spend less time reading in the courses they do take. A 2023 survey of Harvard seniors found that they spend almost as much time on jobs and extracurriculars as they do on academics. And thanks to years of grade inflation (in a recent report, 79 percent of Harvard grades were in the A range), college kids can get by without doing all of their assigned work.

Whether through atrophy or apathy, a generation of students is reading fewer books. They might read more as they age—older adults are the most voracious readers—but the data are not encouraging. The American Time Use Survey shows that the overall pool of people who read books for pleasure has shrunk over the past two decades. A couple of professors told me that their students see reading books as akin to listening to vinyl records—something that a small subculture may still enjoy, but that’s mostly a relic of an earlier time.

The economic survival of the publishing industry requires an audience willing and able to spend time with an extended piece of writing. But as readers of a literary magazine will surely appreciate, more than a venerable industry is at stake. Books can cultivate a sophisticated form of empathy, transporting a reader into the mind of someone who lived hundreds of years ago, or a person who lives in a radically different context from the reader’s own. “A lot of contemporary ideas of empathy are built on identification, identity politics,” Kahn, the Berkeley professor, said. “Reading is more complicated than that, so it enlarges your sympathies.”

Yet such benefits require staying with a character through their journey; they cannot be approximated by reading a five- or even 30-page excerpt. According to the neuroscientist Maryanne Wolf, so-called deep reading—sustained immersion in a text—stimulates a number of valuable mental habits, including critical thinking and self-reflection, in ways that skimming or reading in short bursts does not.

Over and over, the professors I spoke with painted a grim picture of young people’s reading habits. (The historian Adrian Johns was one dissenter, but allowed, “My experience is a bit unusual because the University of Chicago is, like, the last bastion of people who do read things.”) For years, Dames has asked his first-years about their favorite book. In the past, they cited books such as Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre. Now, he says, almost half of them cite young-adult books. Rick Riordan’s Percy Jackson series seems to be a particular favorite.

I can imagine worse preparations for the trials, and thrills, of Lit Hum. Riordan’s series, although full of frothy action and sometimes sophomoric humor, also cleverly engages in a literary exercise as old as the Western canon: spinning new adventures for the petulant gods and compromised heroes of Greek mythology. But of course there is a reason that, despite millennia of reinterpretations, we’ve never forgotten the originals. To understand the human condition, and to appreciate humankind’s greatest achievements, you still need to read The Iliad—all of it.

Due to an editing error, this article initially misstated the year Nicholas Dames started teaching Literature Humanities.

Source (Archive)
 
I literally do not understand this. Age six or seven we look at some 18th century documents like the Declaration or Constitution and they're mystified. Then we start reading it aloud and tell them to try to follow along. In literal minutes they can read cursive and they maintain that ability. This is true well before they can write cursive letters.
Gen alpha has a legit hard time figuring out directory structures, most of them aren't going to figure out old person writing that has literally zero application to their day to day lives.
 
Funnily enough, knowing cursive these days seems to really help in getting a job. Seriously, a lot of hiring managers these days treat cursive as this super-impressive skill, even in jobs where it isn't even required. I think that shows just how far educational standards have fallen, honestly; granted, I live in an area where intelligence was never anyone's strong suit, so... my experiences probably aren't accurate everywhere.
 
I get the context, but that's unfair. We Latinos have a big literary story. Our people do read. It's these morons making it bad for everybody else.
Don Quixote de la Mancha, the first chuunibyou? Saw his statue in Madrid and it was great. Book was a laugh riot in English, can't imagine it's not gut-busting in the original Spanish.
What I get from talking to women is modern romance is shit, they read it but don't love it, and can't sperg about it together. Anglo ladies' favorite book might actually be Pride and Prejudice (now that Harry Potter is troonphobic), because they collectively coom over that lizard-faced actor and bullied each other into reading the book for status.
Taste in romance is missing tbh, people just need to get their dose of drama and be off with their lives.
Imagine being forced to use a method that doesn't work and then be treated like you just aren't doing it right. That's where big professional development contracts come in
Every intervention ever.
It's not surprising to me at all that many school children don't like to read. Avid readers are like 5% of the population, for the rest their brain hurts when they try to read something too long for them. However, what is astounding that these are young people at prestigious universities, that are supposedly highly selective.
They're selected for passing exams, doing what they're told, and blending in with the professional-managerial blob.
The Canon's contents can be argued about in perpetuity. It is not a ridged thing. Taste changes with the weather. Some works go with time. Others return from an absence. A few never leave despite my personal dislike (Wuthering Heights, Keats). There are, however, works most will agree upon.
Books yet to be written such as The Epic of Chris-Chan or The Bossman Odyssey would make excellent additions. Readers with more modern tastes may appreciate a dose of the Tomlinson Tales or The Rekieta Papers.

Also literary canon is rigid, not ridged for your pleasure.
 
The professors that assigned entire books (proper texts, not something like a Shakespeare play) were always huge faggots that wanted you to revolve your life around their class. Not to say I didn’t do it, but it was always a pain in the ass since I had 3-4 other classes with more important work loads. These faggots wanted to lower standards for nonwhites and women only to suffer because of it.
Jack Chen, a Chinese-literature professor at the University of Virginia, finds his students “shutting down” when confronted with ideas they don’t understand; they’re less able to persist through a challenging text than they used to be.
This is the natural result of education taking place in an environment where making mistakes is never forgiven. Teachers bitch about this constantly, but are also more than happy to snap at students for not saying something that aligns with their Marxist world view.
 
This is the natural result of education taking place in an environment where making mistakes is never forgiven. Teachers bitch about this constantly, but are also more than happy to snap at students for not saying something that aligns with their Marxist world view.
They want you to learn but don't want you to question, which leads to not getting any actual solutions.
 
I get the context, but that's unfair. We Latinos have a big literary story. Our people do read. It's these morons making it bad for everybody else
Yep they read lawn equipment repair manuals, tortilla recipes and guides on how to be a cholo..... I'm joking of course 🤪

That said on El Estados Unidos, they can read in English
The funny thing is that the very same English departments bemoaning the fact that kids can't read were the vanguard of the anti-standards movement in the 00s. They were publishing papers back then about how "proper grammar" is a racist idea, how reading proficiency scores are racist, and how requiring niggers to read novels was racist. And now, after decades of their ideas percolating down and infesting primary education, surprise, college students don't read.



Yes, it is. You think Aristotle was a contemporary of Thomas Jefferson?
Yep, they were the First ones to SHIT all over any EVIL WHYTE DEVIL author and replace them with some talentless diversity pick "author".
I literally do not understand this. Age six or seven we look at some 18th century documents like the Declaration or Constitution and they're mystified. Then we start reading it aloud and tell them to try to follow along. In literal minutes they can read cursive and they maintain that ability. This is true well before they can write cursive letters.
Yep, I wrote in cursive all throughout elementary school and could read and write it quite well by 3rd grade.

Nor teaching it is just laziness or malicious as the "teachers" take up that time with troon / LGBTQIA+ gender bullshit.
They want you to learn but don't want you to question, which leads to not getting any actual solutions.
They want you to guzzle their Marxist ideologies and agree with them 24/7

Fuck, STEVEN KING of all people tore those ideological professors a new asshole in IT of all places.
 
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What I get from talking to women is modern romance is shit, they read it but don't love it, and can't sperg about it together.
Why is that? I don't really read the genre but I'm curious what has gone wrong if anyone has any idea
This sort of dishonesty is what leads to kids being turned off reading because they're forced to read 'classics' instead of something that would actually appeal to them.
Or they get forced to read boring classics instead of any of the good ones. Nothing wrong with good old Catcher in the Rye or To Kill a Mockingbird. They're easy, short, to the point, and are many peoples favorite books into adulthood. Give them some kurt vonnegut or something too. There's tons of good old enjoyable stuff.

The cursive stuff amuses me. I was forced to sit after dinner and improve my cursive every night for weeks in like 3rd grade because I wasn't good enough at it. So I've enjoyed seeing it fall out of use, and felt vindicated in my lack of interest in it. My 3rd grade self was entirely correct: cursive IS stupid.
 
Why is that? I don't really read the genre but I'm curious what has gone wrong if anyone has any idea

Or they get forced to read boring classics instead of any of the good ones. Nothing wrong with good old Catcher in the Rye or To Kill a Mockingbird. They're easy, short, to the point, and are many peoples favorite books into adulthood. Give them some kurt vonnegut or something too. There's tons of good old enjoyable stuff.

The cursive stuff amuses me. I was forced to sit after dinner and improve my cursive every night for weeks in like 3rd grade because I wasn't good enough at it. So I've enjoyed seeing it fall out of use, and felt vindicated in my lack of interest in it. My 3rd grade self was entirely correct: cursive IS stupid.
Only time I use cursive is to sign my name. Otherwise use manuscript, both in English and Hangul (Korean).
 
Nor teaching it is just laziness or malicious as the "teachers" take up that time with troon / LGBTQIA+ gender bullshit.
Not teaching it is not decided by teachers. It's because writing by hand is difficult and contributes to the achievement gap, which can't be closed, so now educational experts are demanding to hide it.
 
Not bitter that I had to read crap like Night
You want a weird redpill story regarding that book?

Sophomore year of HS (very early 00s) I had a notoriously awful English teacher and Night was our first book of the year. It sucked. Roughly a month after we finished it, said teacher got super-mega-fired (the key item here was a bottle of opiates not belonging to her, you can guess the rest) and the class' new substitute inherited no lesson plan or notes, so she decided we were going to start with.. Night. Again.

There were complaints, but the homework was literally the exact same sets of questions we were assigned the first time and since I typed all of my homework it was trivial to just reprint everything with names and dates changed. Near the end of the year the sub leaves and the new permanent English teacher takes over the class and guess what we're going to read as our first book?

I stopped going to that class, got in shit for it and presented my guidance counselor with three different copies of the same assignment each dated a month or so apart. That got me out of the class, but I found out sometime later I was the only person who'd cared enough to report it and at the time it felt really shocking to find out I was the only one who gave a shit.

I'm completely unsurprised given how histrionic the discussions over it in class were.
 
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Sophomore year of HS (very early 00s) I had a notoriously awful English teacher and Night was our first book of the year. It sucked. Roughly a month after we finished it, said teacher got super-mega-fired (the key item here was a bottle of opiates not belonging to her, you can guess the rest) and the class' new substitute inherited no lesson plan or notes, so she decided we were going to start with.. Night. Again.

There were complaints, but the homework was literally the exact same sets of questions we were assigned the first time and since I typed all of my homework it was trivial to just reprint everything with names and dates changed. Near the end of the year the sub leaves and the new permanent English teacher takes over the class and guess what we're going to read as our first book?
oof. Having to read that pile of Holo-shit not once, not twice, but THREE TIMES IN A ROW? I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy.
 
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Not teaching it is not decided by teachers. It's because writing by hand is difficult and contributes to the achievement gap, which can't be closed, so now educational experts are demanding to hide it.
Yep. Pretty much all education standards are dropping across the board in order to Harrison Bergeron the smartest white kids to the level of the dumbest nigs.
 
So our ability to read and understand and digest the ideas in a whole book is one of our big advantages over AI.
It’s fascinating to me how many people are willing to off-load critical thinking for pretty verbiage. I’m a contrarian by nature, so I’d never like anything I didn’t produce myself, but I’m genuinely astounded by the nonchalance with which people allow machines to speak for them. And, besides, as you say, the machine is frequently wrong.
I'm talking literally things like letters being drawn the incorrect way (backwards, etc), spaced way apart, and just generally looking like that scene from Billy Madison where Adam Sandler tries to write a "Z" in cursive.
I’ve had to read a lot of work by kids and young adults recently, and I see reversed letters and numbers constantly. It’s bizarre; I don’t understand it. I thought it was a symptom of dyslexia, but these aren’t people with “accommodations”, so I guess it’s just considered normal now? Beyond that, 22 isn’t 55. How are they not embarrassed?
 
I don't actually understand why anyone that wasn't really, really passionate about reading books would choose to study English/Literature
someone without a deep personal interest in reading literature would choose to study it at the University level, and then be seemingly surprised that they have to read a lot. Didn't they think to ask beforehand what would be expected of them?
literature courses are a general education requirement for 99% of degrees. if you want to be an engineer, lawyer, accountant, mba, scientist, chemist, physicist, physical therapist, or computer scientist you are almost certainly taking two literature courses at most universities in the us
 
I was on the same boat. Schools liked handing excerpts and on the rare occasion they assigned a whole book it was a pain in the ass. Far-in-height 451 was ruined to me because I read it in school, rather than my own pace. At college age however, you better learn how to read a book in a week.
Sorry, but you read F451 in a single afternoon not in a week or more.
It is a very short book.

But it is a trend. Kids are becoming more and more retarded and less skilled, all in the name of lowering standards. Because high-achieving students == white supremacy.
In a decade or two, virtually everyone you interact with or depend on in the workplace or outside will be a person that has never read a book and can never keep attention longer than a tiktok video. They will probably also have a vocabulary of just a few hundred words and can not read or understand simple written instructions.

Not being able to read and comprehend long-form text is basically an admission that their brain can not process any information longer than a couple of sentences at a time.
 
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The cursive stuff amuses me. I was forced to sit after dinner and improve my cursive every night for weeks in like 3rd grade because I wasn't good enough at it. So I've enjoyed seeing it fall out of use, and felt vindicated in my lack of interest in it. My 3rd grade self was entirely correct: cursive IS stupid.
Arguably, learning cursive is pointless, although less so than much of the shit they teach in schools. On the other hand, it is fucking easy, and therefore having shitty handwriting is a decent indicator as to how spastic/lazy someone is.
 
Reading this thread is so depressing. I just mentioned Idiocracy in another thread, lo and behold it's getting even more relevant than before.
You could argue that we already have our "Ow, My Balls!" in the form of vines/tik toks and general state of cinema might as well amount to "Ass"(as that's all it was, for 90 minutes).
Of course, there is also the general lack of reading and writing among the average person nowdays as well as lacking in vocabulary + "brainrot" zoomer speak. One thing Idiocracy didn't get right was future getting browner and gayer, so in a way even that would be an improvement.
 
It comes down to lazy parents and iPad kids. When I was little my mom used to read to me and we would look at books together and communicate and learn, even if it was just picture books. Now, you just give a toddler and iPad and play Candy Crush. While that might be stimulating, they're not reading anything or making connections. Its more akin to putting your child in front of a slot machine than an engaging experience.

Re. cursive: I hated it in elementary school but now when I write down a quick note, I write with this cursive print blend of shorthand. I've found the primary use for cursive is for reading older peoples handwriting, letters, recipes and documents in the past 100 years.
 
There are proofs out there that extensive Internet use gives people cognitive impairment equivalent to brain damage after but 2 weeks. I know from myself how 24h/day access to the Internet can ruin your attention span and ability to concentrate.
 
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